The Sun (Malaysia)

Chinese semiconduc­tor industry defiant

Chip makers push for self-sufficienc­y as Western trade curbs bite

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“Support Chinese chips, join the enterprise of the century” read an upbeat slogan at a recent semiconduc­tor industry fair in Shanghai, where the mood was defiant despite the intense pressure placed on the sector by geopolitic­al tensions.

Stands at last week’s Semicon were packed with visitors, who inspected the mostly domestic displays of glittering wafers, silicon ingots and circuit boards, while sales staff touted products and services running the gamut of the chip manufactur­ing process.

Semiconduc­tors, which power everything from mobile phones to cars, have become a key battlegrou­nd in recent years, with the United States and some European countries blocking exports of high-tech chip technology to China over fears of military use.

In response, Beijing has turbo-charged a drive for self-sufficienc­y – a prominent theme at the fair, with exhibitors plastering their stands with slogans like “overcome ‘bottleneck’ technology, realise nationalis­ation of key Chinese chip materials”.

“The more restrictio­ns the United States imposes on us, the faster some of our domestic companies will develop,” an industry profession­al named Wang told AFP.

Vicky Zheng, a representa­tive of a Qingdao-based chip assembly company, said she believed restrictio­ns would force China to “have more updated developmen­t to catch up or even replace things, so we will have more and better solutions”.

Huang, an exhibitor representi­ng the Suzhou-based semiconduc­tor testing company King Long Technology, agreed.

“Under an environmen­t with such

pressure, China’s internal expansion of some technology and production capacity and the training of technical personnel are making very rapid progress.”

In September, the United States and its allies got a nasty shock when it appeared that rapid progress was indeed underway.

Telecoms giant Huawei released its new Mate 60 Pro smartphone, powered by the Kirin 9000s chip.

The chip initially appeared to be a homegrown replacemen­t of the earlier Kirin 9000 chip made by Taiwan’s TSMC, which Huawei is no longer able to purchase due to US sanctions.

But the chip’s provenance has since come into question, with a US official saying last Thursday that the Huawei chip could have been made using American equipment, in violation of Washington’s export controls.

Huang admitted that foreign restrictio­ns would “still have an impact”, especially in the short term.

Major domestic chip firms have warned of losses over the past year, with fabless chip maker Loongson Technology reporting a 329 million yuan (RM215 million) net loss for 2023, compared to a 5.2 million yuan profit in 2022.

The company, which was put on a US Commerce Department blacklist last year and barred from accessing key American technologi­es, said in a report last month that its research developmen­t costs had shot up more than 36%.

Scotten W. Jones, a senior fellow at specialist platform TechInsigh­ts, said he understood that the current Chinese standard of the lithograph­y equipment that makes semiconduc­tors was “significan­tly behind the best equipment from (Dutch chip-making machine supplier) ASML”.

“Ultimately if China is willing to invest enough, they can likely catch up with the rest of the world but my guess is it is at least a decade away,” said Jones.

 ?? AFPPIC ?? Semiconduc­tor products on display during the Semicon exhibition in Shanghai. –
AFPPIC Semiconduc­tor products on display during the Semicon exhibition in Shanghai. –

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